examples | ||
uefi | ||
README.md |
POSIX-UEFI
We hate that horrible and ugly UEFI API, we want POSIX!
This is a very small library (32k) that helps you to develop for UEFI under Linux (and other POSIX systems). It was greatly inspired by gnu-efi (big big kudos to those guys), but it is a lot smaller, easier to integrate (works with Clang and GNU gcc both) and easier to use because it provides a POSIX like API.
To use it, you have two options:
Distributing as Static Library
In the uefi
directory, run
$ make
This will create build/uefi
with all the necessary files in it. These are:
- crt0.o, the run-time that bootstraps POSIX-UEFI
- link.ld, the linker script you must use with POSIX-UEFI (same as with gnu-efi)
- libuefi.a, the library itself
- uefi.h, the all-in-one C / C++ header
You can use this and link your application with it, but you won't be able to recompile it, plus you're on your own with the linking and converting.
Strictly speaking you'll only need crt0.o and link.ld, that will get you started and will call your application's "main()", but to get libc functions like memcmp, strcpy, malloc or fopen, you'll have to link with libuefi.a.
Distributing as Source
This is the preferred way, as it also provides a Makefile to set up your toolchain properly.
- simply copy the
uefi
directory into your source tree (or set up a git submodule). Twelfe files, about 140K in total. - create an extremely simple Makefile like below
- compile your code for UEFI by running
make
TARGET = helloworld.efi
include uefi/Makefile
An example helloworld.c goes like this:
#include <uefi.h>
int main(int argc, wchar_t **argv)
{
printf(L"Hello World!\n");
return 0;
}
Available Makefile Options
Variable | Description |
---|---|
TARGET |
the target application (required) |
SRCS |
list of source files you want to compile (defaults to *.c *.S) |
CFALGS |
compiler flags you want to use (empty by default, like "-Wall -pedantic -std=c99") |
LDFLAGS |
linker flags you want to use (I don't think you'll ever need this, just in case) |
LIBS |
additional libraries you want to link with (like "-lm", only static .a libraries allowed) |
USE_LLVM |
set this if you want LLVM Clang / Lld instead of GNU gcc / ld |
ARCH |
the target architecture (only x86_64 supported for now, but the toolchain can handle multiple archs) |
Here's a more advanced Makefile example:
ARCH = x86_64
TARGET = helloworld.efi
SRCS = $(wildcard *.c)
CFLAGS = -pedantic -Wall -Wextra -Werror --std=c11 -O2
LDFLAGS =
LIBS = -lm
USE_LLVM = 1
include uefi/Makefile
Accessing UEFI Services
It is very likely that you want to call UEFI specific functions directly. For that, POSIX-UEFI specifies some globals
in uefi.h
:
Global Variable | Description |
---|---|
*BS |
efi_boot_services_t, pointer to the Boot Time Services |
*RT |
efi_runtime_t, pointer to the Runtime Services |
*ST |
efi_system_table_t, pointer to the UEFI System Table |
IM |
efi_handle_t of your Loaded Image |
The EFI structures, enums, typedefs and defines are all converted to ANSI C standard POSIX style, for example BOOLEAN -> boolean_t, UINTN -> uintn_t, EFI_MEMORY_DESCRIPTOR -> efi_memory_descriptor_t, and of course EFI_BOOT_SERVICES -> efi_boot_services_t.
That header also provides an UEFI ABI wrapper, exactly the same as in gnu-efi, and functions to exit Boot Services and to dump memory for your convenience.
Function | Description |
---|---|
uefi_call_wrapper() |
call a function with UEFI ABI (provided by crt0) |
uefi_exit_bs() |
leave this UEFI bullshit behind (provided by crt0) |
uefi_dumpmem() |
dump memory (provided by libuefi.a) |
Unlike gnu-efi, POSIX-UEFI does not pollute your application with unused GUID variables. It only provides header definitions, so you must create each GUID instance if and when you need them.
Example:
efi_guid_t gopGuid = EFI_GRAPHICS_OUTPUT_PROTOCOL_GUID;
efi_gop_t *gop = NULL;
status = uefi_call_wrapper(BS->LocateProtocol, 3, &gopGuid, NULL, (void**)&gop);
Also unlike gnu-efi, POSIX-UEFI does not provide standard EFI headers. It expects that you have installed those under /usr/include/efi from EDK II or gnu-efi with your distro's package management solution, and POSIX-UEFI makes it possible for you to use those system wide headers. POSIX-UEFI itself ships the very minimum set of typedefs and structs.
#include <efi.h>
#include <uefi.h> /* this will work as expected! Both POSIX-UEFI and EDK II / gnu-efi typedefs accessible */
Notable Differences to POSIX libc
This library is nowhere near as complete as glibc or musl for example. It only provides the very basic libc functions for you, because simplicity was one of its main goals. It is the best to say this is just wrapper around the UEFI API, rather than a POSIX compatible libc.
All strings in the UEFI environment are stored with 16 bits wide characters. The library provides wchar_t
type for that,
so for example your main() is NOT like main(int argc, char **argv)
, but main(int argc, wchar_t **argv)
instead. All
the other string related libc functions (like strlen() for example) use this wide character type too. Functions that supposed
to handle characters in int type (like getchar
, putchar
), do not truncate to unsigned char, rather to wchar_t. For this
reason, you must specify your string literals with L""
and characters with L''
. There's an additional getchar_ifany
function, which does not block, but returns 0 when there's no key pressed.
That's about it, everything else is the same.
List of Provided POSIX Functions
stdlib.h
Function | Description |
---|---|
atoi | as usual, but accepts wide char strings and understands "0x" prefix |
atol | as usual, but accepts wide char strings and understands "0x" prefix |
strtol | as usual, but accepts wide char strings |
malloc | as usual |
calloc | as usual |
realloc | as usual (needs testing) |
free | as usual |
abort | as usual |
exit | as usual |
mbtowc | as usual (UTF-8 char to wchar_t) |
wctomb | as usual (wchar_t to UTF-8 char) |
mbstowcs | as usual (UTF-8 string to wchar_t string) |
wcstombs | as usual (wchar_t string to UTF-8 string) |
stdio.h
Function | Description |
---|---|
fopen | as usual, but accepts wide char strings, for mode L"r", L"w" and L"a" only |
fclose | as usual |
fflush | as usual |
fread | as usual, only real files accepted (no stdin) |
fwrite | as usual, only real files accepted (no stdout nor stderr) |
fseek | as usual, only real files accepted (no stdin, stdout, stderr) |
ftell | as usual, only real files accepted (no stdin, stdout, stderr) |
fprintf | as usual, but accepts wide char strings, max BUFSIZ, files, stdout, stderr |
printf | as usual, but accepts wide char strings, max BUFSIZ, stdout only |
sprintf | as usual, but accepts wide char strings, max BUFSIZ |
vfprintf | as usual, but accepts wide char strings, max BUFSIZ, files, stdout, stderr |
vprintf | as usual, but accepts wide char strings, max BUFSIZ |
vsprintf | as usual, but accepts wide char strings, max BUFSIZ |
snprintf | as usual, but accepts wide char strings |
vsnprintf | as usual, but accepts wide char strings |
getchar | as usual, waits for a key, blocking, stdin only (no redirects) |
getchar_ifany | non-blocking, returns 0 if there was no key press, UNICODE otherwise |
putchar | as usual, stdout only (no redirects) |
String formating is limited; only supports padding via number prefixes, %d
, %x
, %X
, %c
, %s
, %q
and
%p
. Because it operates on wchar_t, it also supports the non-standard %C
(printing an UTF-8 character, needs
char*), %S
(printing an UTF-8 string), %Q
(printing an escaped UTF-8 string). These functions don't allocate
memory, but in return the total length of the output string cannot be longer than BUFSIZ (8k), except for the
variants which have a maxlen argument.
string.h
Function | Description |
---|---|
memcpy | as usual, works on bytes |
memmove | as usual, works on bytes |
memset | as usual, works on bytes |
memcmp | as usual, works on bytes |
memchr | as usual, works on bytes |
memrchr | as usual, works on bytes |
memmem | as usual, works on bytes |
memrmem | as usual, works on bytes |
strcpy | works on wide char strings |
strncpy | works on wide char strings |
strcat | works on wide char strings |
strncat | works on wide char strings |
strcmp | works on wide char strings |
strncmp | works on wide char strings |
strdup | works on wide char strings |
strchr | works on wide char strings |
strrchr | works on wide char strings |
strstr | works on wide char strings |
strtok | works on wide char strings |
strtok_r | works on wide char strings |
strlen | works on wide char strings |
time.h
Function | Description |
---|---|
localtime | no arguments, always returns current time in struct tm |
unistd.h
Function | Description |
---|---|
usleep | the usual |
sleep | the usual |